This chapter contains serious exhortations, mixed with threatening;
but the Prophet threatens for the purpose of correcting the
indifference of the people, whom we have seen to have been very tardy
to consider God’s judgments. Now the reason why I wished to join
together these eleven verses was, bec... [ Continue Reading ]
And then he says, _A day of darkness and of thick darkness, a day of
clouds and of obscurity, as the dawn which expands over the mountains.
_By calling it a dark and gloomy day, he wished to show that there
would be no hope of deliverance; for, according to the common usage of
Scripture, we know tha... [ Continue Reading ]
_Before them, _he says,_the fire will devour, and after them the flame
will burn. _He means that the vengeance of God would be such as would
consume the whole people: for God has in various ways begun to
chastise the people, but, as we have seen, without any advantage. The
Prophet then says here tha... [ Continue Reading ]
He afterwards adds many similitudes, which any one of himself can
sufficiently understand: I shall not therefore be long in explaining
them, and many words would be superfluous. _As the appearance of
horses their appearance, and as horsemen, so will they run. _This
verse sets forth again the suddenn... [ Continue Reading ]
_Like the sound of chariots. _They expound מרכבות _merecabut_,
chariots, though the Hebrews rather think them to be harnesses or
saddles as we call them; but yet I prefer to view them as chariots;
for what the Prophet says, that they _shall leap on the tops of
mountains _like the sound of chariots,... [ Continue Reading ]
At length he adds, _As a strong people, prepared for battle; their
face the people will dread, and all faces shall gather blackness. _By
these words the Prophet intimates that the Assyrians at their coming
would be supplied with such power as would, by report only, lay
prostrate all people. But if t... [ Continue Reading ]
He then adds, _A man shall not push his brother. _By this mode of
speaking the Prophet means that they would come in perfect order, so
that the multitude would create no confusion, as it is mostly the
case: for it is very difficult for an army to march in regular order
without tumult, like two or th... [ Continue Reading ]
It afterwards follows, _Through the city shall they march; over the
wall shall they run here and there; into houses shall they climb;
through the windows shall they enter like a thief. _The Prophet here
shows that the Jews in vain trusted in their fortified cities, for the
enemies would easily penet... [ Continue Reading ]
Then he adds, _Before their face shall the earth tremble, and in
anguish shall be the heavens; the sun and the moon shall become dark,
and the stars shall withdraw their brightness. _The Prophet speaks
here more hyperbolically; but we must ever remember that he addressed
men extremely stupid: it the... [ Continue Reading ]
He at last adds, _And Jehovah will utter his voice before his army.
_The Prophet seems in this verse to anticipate whatever objection men
might adduce. “O! thou denounces on us great terrors, and as if the
Assyrians were not to be counted as men, as if no other people were in
the world, as if there... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet, having proclaimed the dreadful judgment which we have
noticed, now shows that he did not intend to terrify the people
without reason, but, on the contrary, to encourage them to repentance;
which he could not do without offering to them the hope of pardon; for
as we have said before, and... [ Continue Reading ]
He then subjoins, _Rend your heart, and not your garments, and turn to
Jehovah your God. _The Prophet again repeats that we ought to deal
sincerely with God; for all those ceremonies, by which men imagine
that they discharge their duties, are mere mockeries, when they are
not preceded by a pure and... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet seems at first sight to leave men here perplexed and
doubtful; and yet in the last verse, as we have seen, he had Offered a
hope of favor, provided they sincerely repented. Hence the Prophet
seems not to pursue the same subject, but rather to vary it: and we
have already said, that all e... [ Continue Reading ]
Here again the Prophet reminds them that there was need of deep
repentance; for not only individuals had transgressed, but the whole
people had become guilty before God; and we also know how many and
grievous their sins had been. There is no wonder then that the Prophet
requires a public profession... [ Continue Reading ]
_Proclaim, _he says, _a meeting _ עצרה _otsare _is not properly an
assembly, but the deed itself: (6) hence also the word is transferred
to festivals. _Proclaim, _then, _a meeting, call the people, sanctify
the assembly. _The word, sanctify, seems to be taken here in a sense
different from what it h... [ Continue Reading ]
Then it follows, _Between the court and the altar let the priests, the
ministers of Jehovah, weep. _It was the priests’ office, we know, to
pray in the name of the whole people; and now the Prophet follows this
order. It was not, indeed, peculiar to the priests to pray and to ask
pardon of God; but... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet here again repeats, that prayers would not be in vain,
provided the Jews truly humbled themselves before God. Then God, he
says, will be jealous for his land and spare his people. He confirms
what I have already said that God would deal mercifully with his
people, because they were his h... [ Continue Reading ]
He afterwards says, _God has answered _(8) _and said to his people,
Behold, I will send to you corn, wine, and oil. _The Prophet does not
here recite what had been done, but, on the contrary, declares, that
God in future would be reconciled to them; as though he said, “I
have hitherto been a herald... [ Continue Reading ]
In this verse he more fully confirms the Jews, that they might not be
afraid of reproach from the Gentiles. It may have been that the
Assyrians were now in readiness, prepared for war; it was then
difficult to free the Jews from every fear. The Prophet had said
generally that they would be no more s... [ Continue Reading ]
Here he shows that God would have his turn to exalt himself, which the
Assyrian presumptuously attempted to do. For God seems for a time to
lie still, when he withholds himself, when he puts not forth his
power, but waits to see the tendency of the insane conspiracies and
the Satanic madness of thos... [ Continue Reading ]
Here the Prophet turns his address to the beasts; not that his
instruction suited them; but it was a more efficacious mode of
speaking, when he invited the very beasts to a participation of the
people’s joy; for except the Jews had been made to know that God’s
wrath was now nigh at hand, no consolat... [ Continue Reading ]
He now exhorts the Jews also to rejoice, but in a way different from
that of the land and of the beasts. _Rejoice, _he says, _in your God.
_For the beasts and the sheep, while rejoicing, cannot raise their
thoughts higher than to their food: hence, the joy of brute animals,
as they say, terminates i... [ Continue Reading ]
He goes on with the same subject in this verse, and shows the effects
of rain; for when the earth is irrigated and satiated with sufficient
moisture, it brings forth fruit, rich and plentiful. God then will
cause that the rains shall not be useless, for the floors shall be
full of wheat, and the fat... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet confirms what he had previously said, and states what is
of an opposite character, — that God can as easily restore a rich
fruitfulness to the land as he had before rendered it barren by
sending devouring insects. _I will give you years, _(for the other
years,) he says; and that the Jews... [ Continue Reading ]
He now concludes what he has hitherto said of God’s blessing. As the
Jews were starving while God was offended, so he promises that when
reconciled to him they should have abundance of produce from the land:
_Ye shall eat plentifully, he says, and satisfy yourselves. _But he
mentions also their grat... [ Continue Reading ]
He repeats the same sentence; and in the beginning of the verse he
unfolds what I have already said — that the miracle would be such as
to constrain the people to praise God. _Ye shall know that I am in the
midst of Israel: _and this was the case, because God showed not in an
ordinary way his kindne... [ Continue Reading ]
We have explained why the Prophet began with earthly blessings. One
may indeed think that this order is not regular; for Christ does not
in vain remind us, that the kingdom of God ought to be first sought,
and that other things shall be added in their place, (Matthew 6:33;)
for food, and every thing... [ Continue Reading ]
As the particle גם _gam _amplifies in Hebrew, it seems singular that
the Prophet now limits to a few a gift common to all; for he had
previously said, “Upon all flesh will I pour out my Spirit;” and
now, “Upon servants and handmaids;” and he puts down “Also”.
If he had simply said “Upon servants and... [ Continue Reading ]
The Prophet seems here to contradict himself; for he had hitherto
promised that God would deal kindly and bountifully with his people;
and every thing he has said tended to elevate the spirits of the
people and fill them with joy: but now he seems again to threaten them
with God’s wrath and to strik... [ Continue Reading ]
We now see why the Prophet adds here this sad catalogue, and how well
these things harmonize together, — that God would testify his
paternal love by the manifestation of Christ, — and that he would
exhibit tokens of his wrath, which would fill the whole world with
anxiety and fear.
What he says of b... [ Continue Reading ]
We said yesterday that the Prophet denounced future calamities, that
he might thus stimulate men, distressed by many evils, to seek God: we
indeed know how tardy we are by nature, except the Lord goads us
continually. The subject, then, on which we discoursed yesterday
tended to show, that as so man... [ Continue Reading ]